 Okay, I will call to order the 71st meeting of the National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research. Welcome, everybody. We have, as always, a busy schedule ahead of us for the open session. And so without further ado, I'll turn this over to Rudy for a few items to be taken care of. Okay, good morning, everyone. Let me remind the council members that we're being webcast and video archived. Let me make mention of our council liaison, Ellen Giarelli from the International Society of Nurses and Genetics, Joe McInerney from the American Society of Human Genetics, James O'Leary from the Genetic Alliance, Rhonda Schoenberg from the National Society of Genetic Counselors, and Michael Watson from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. And Rhonda and Joe are with us in person today. Welcome. We have some new NHGRI employees, and our practice is to introduce the employees to the council members. So when I call your name, would you please rise in the back. Melinda Rose. Melinda is a program assistant. She works the front desk up on the fourth floor, and she generates lots of internal reports that are very useful for the staff for tracking grant applications and reviews as they occur across the NIH. She comes to us from the Child Health Institute, where she was a grants technical assistance and has expertise in running peer review meetings. Thank you, Melinda. Christine Chang. Christine is the new lead scientific program analyst in the extramural research program, in addition to participating in a subset of the research activities that go on. She also has the responsibility to provide training and orientation for the new crop of program analysts that we recruit each year. Christine has a master's in public health. She comes to us from the National Cancer Institute's Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, where she spent three years as a research assistant working on cancer epidemiological studies. Thank you, Christine. Ken Wiley. Ken is a new program director in the Division of Genomic Medicine. Ken's doctoral training was in pharmacology, and his postdoctoral work was in epigenetics and bioinformatics. He's worked at the FDA in regulatory sciences and pharmacogenomics. Prior to his arrival at NHGRI, he was an associate at Booz Allen Hamilton, where he developed software tools for use in clinical trials. Ken will be working on the eMERGE and H3Africa projects, and I'll be working with grants involving pharmacogenomics and bioinformatics. Thank you, Ken. David Kaufman. Ken is a new program director in the Division of Genomics and Society. David's training is in genetic epidemiology. Before coming to NHGRI, David was the director of research at the Genetics and Public Policy Center at Johns Hopkins University. David was an NIH grantee there conducting research on the engagement of stakeholders with interests and policy issues related to clinical genetics and genomic research. This is David's first day on the job, so we're not going to scare him to death by recounting all of the programs that he's going to be working on in the LC research program, but he'll be deeply integrated in all those programs. And enjoy your fingerprinting experience today, and, yeah, oh, we've already done it, okay. And because life is a cycle, we welcome the new and we send out the old. Could I ask the following people, if they're present to stand? Jessica Berry, Pritha Nandi, Kathy Sung, and Sheri Zhu. This is our graduating class of program analysts. They're all off to graduate programs and medical schools. They have served us well. They make us proud, and we wish them a great success. So congratulations to all of you. I should also announce we have a couple of visitors, Adam Berger from the Institute of Medicine, and Reika A.R. from the Genetic Society of America. I call the council members' attention to the future meeting dates for the next six meetings over the coming two years. Please have a look at those dates. Communicate these to your assistants. Mark your calendars. If you see any schedule conflicts, talk to me and comfort about it, okay? And Eric? Oh, that's a really good idea when we do that. You've seen a copy of the minutes from the February council meeting. I'll ask if there are any comments or corrections that you'd care to make. And hearing none, I'll ask for you to approve the minutes. Can I have a motion to approve the minutes, please? Motion. A second. All in favor? Any opposed? Thank you. Okay, Eric, your director's report, please.